List View – The list view in EAC has been designed to remove key limitations that existed in ECP. ECP was limited to displaying up to 500 objects and, if you wanted to view objects that weren’t listed in the details pane, you needed to use searching and filtering to find those specific objects

Yes. Limited to displaying up to 500 objects

Yes. List view is approximately 20,000 objects

Yes. List view is approximately 20,000 objects

Notification Viewer

Notification viewer – The Notification viewer allows you to view the status of long-running processes and, if you choose, receive notification via an email message when the process completes.

Cloud on your terms

Cloud on your terms: Deploy mailboxes on-premises, online, or a combination of both with a hybrid deployment.

The Large low-cost mailboxes: Get support for larger mailboxes while deploying less expensive storage.

Managed Availability

Managed availability: Microsoft Exchange 2013 has a new monitoring and alerting engine built into the product called Managed Availability. Managed Availability detects, alerts and recovers problems as they occur within the product.

No. Used System Center Operations Manager (SCOM) to monitor an Exchange environment

Ability to merge contacts from multiple sources: Users can import contact information from LinkedIn (and other networks in the future) so that they have all of their information in one place.

Integration with SharePoint

Integration with SharePoint: Get access to project information from SharePoint and Exchange, all from within Outlook, using site mailboxes.

Data Security

Spam and Malware Protection

Anti-spam and anti-malware protection: Helps protect your network from malicious software transferred through email messages. All messages sent or received by your Exchange server are scanned for malware (viruses and spyware).

No. Because Exchange 2016 has all roles in one Server sharing same server Certificate.

Outlook Web App Spell Check

No. Relies on Browser Spell Check.

No. Relies on Browser Spell Check.

Themes

Exchange 2013 provides over 20 built-in themes

Exchange 2016 provides over 50 built-in themes

Link preview

enables users to paste a link into messages, and Outlook on the web automatically generates a rich preview to give recipients a peek into the contents of the destination. This works with video links as well.

web action pane

Most commonly used actions available such as New, Reply all, and Delete

Most commonly used actions available such as New, Reply all, and Delete

New actions have been added such as Archive, Sweep, and Undo along with previous ones

Apps for Outlook

allow users to use online apps to extend the capabilities of Outlook on the web

allow users to use online apps to extend the capabilities of Outlook on the web

Offline Access

Offline Access: Offline access lets users write messages in their browser when offline, then have the messages delivered when they connect to the Internet

Office Online (Formerly Office web apps)

Microsoft Word

Microsoft Excel

Microsoft Power Point

Microsoft One Note

Sharing and Collaboration

Site Mailboxes

Site mailboxes – Site mailboxes improve collaboration and user productivity by allowing access to both documents in a SharePoint site and email messages in Outlook 2013, using the same client interface.

Shared Mailboxes

Shared mailboxes – A shared mailbox is a mailbox that multiple users can use to read and send email messages. Shared mailboxes can also be used to provide a common calendar, allowing multiple users to schedule and view vacation time or work shifts.

Public Folders

Public Folders – Public folders are designed for shared access and provide an easy and effective way to collect, organize, and share information with other people in your workgroup or organization. Public folders help organize content in a deep hierarchy that’s easy to browse.

Monitor the health of system resources – Managing workloads based on the health of system resources.

Control Resources

Control how resources are consumed by individual users – Controlling how resources are consumed by individual users was possible in Exchange 2010 (where it’s called user throttling), and this capability has been expanded for Exchange 2013.